Wells Fargo has told customers still waiting in line to get an emergency small-business loan that, because of the backlog it's facing, they should consider applying at another bank.
The company issued the warning in an email to customers Friday, just two days after the Federal Reserve lifted the $1.95 trillion asset cap it had imposed on Wells Fargo in 2018. The Fed made the move so the bank could make more Paycheck Protection Program loans to small businesses that took an economic hit tied to the coronavirus epidemic.

Wells, blaming the asset cap, early last week stopped taking applications under the $349 billion program overseen by the Small Business Administration and Treasury Department. After the Fed lifted the cap on April 8, Wells reopened its online portal and again began accepting “expressions of interest” in the SBA loan program.
The email to customers was reported by the San Francisco Business Times on Friday. Separately, a Wells Fargo customer provided a copy of the email to American Banker.
Though Wells has said it is processing applications in the order in which they are received, the bank told customers in the email that they “may be able to apply elsewhere” for a PPP loan.
“While you remain in queue based upon when you submitted your initial interest, due to high demand we are not able to begin your application at this time,” the email said.
“You remain in our queue. However, since there is a limited amount of funds approved by the SBA for the Paycheck Protection Program, we want you to be aware of your options,” the email continued. “You may want to apply elsewhere to increase your chances of receiving a loan before the funds run out.”
House Democrats proposed a $3 trillion virus relief bill Tuesday, combining aid to state and local governments with direct cash payments, tax breaks, expanded unemployment insurance and food stamp spending as well as a list of progressive priorities like funds for voting by mail and the troubled U.S. Postal Service.
Padgett Business Services’ Roger Harris suggests some exceptions for employers with fewer than 50 staff.
The proposal would give a safe harbor to financial institutions that work with cannabis companies in states where the substance is legal. But the bill, which would direct $3 trillion in aid to struggling households, businesses and local governments, faces long odds in the Republican-controlled Senate.
Wells is not alone in being inundated with SBA applications. The SBA program has been marred by chaos since it opened on April 3.
The American Bankers Association said in a report April 12 that $205 billion of the $350 billion appropriated for the PPP already has been claimed. The figure inlcudes applications that banks have processed and that the SBA has approved, though customers may not have received the funds yet.
Last week, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin asked for an additional $250 billion to replenish the emergency loan program due to the huge demand.
A Wells spokeswoman said Monday that customers who filled out an expression of interest are in the queue, waiting their turn. Wells has said it received 170,000 applications in the first two days of the program.
“We are committed to helping as many small businesses as possible given the realities of both this unprecedented situation and the tremendous interest in the PPP,” the spokeswoman said.
To be eligible, customers must have had a Wells Fargo business checking account as of Feb. 15, 2020, be enrolled in business online banking, and meet SBA program requirements.
For more than two years, Wells was barred from growing its assets above $1.95 trillion. The Fed imposed the asset cap on Wells following a string of scandals including revelations that employees had opened millions of customer accounts without authorization.
All profits that Wells Fargo makes from additional support to the SBA program and the Main Street Lending Program for midsize business will go to either the Treasury or a nonprofit that helps small businesses, the Fed said.




